Your product can sell to 10 different customer types, but your ads only reach one.
A minimalist buyer and a farmhouse buyer aren't the same person. Neither is a coastal buyer and an industrial loft buyer. They scroll past different aesthetics. They respond to different moods. They want different things.
They could all buy your product if you showed it in their world.
This works for anything where visual presentation drives the sale. Sofas. Coffee tables. Lighting. Rugs. Outdoor furniture. Home accessories.
If the way it looks determines whether someone clicks "buy," you're leaving audience segments on the table.
That's what Colten was created for,
Generate dozens of on-brand variations of each product, each styled for a different aesthetic segment. Push them all into Meta, structured and ready to test.
Then let the algorithm do its job: discover which product-style-customer combinations actually convert.
The result?
You're opening new markets.
Meta automatically expands your reach into audience pockets you didn't know existed.
Each style variation unlocks a different buyer type. Different buyers = exponential revenue from the same catalog.
You are creating new winning ads
This is persona marketing at scale, powered by Meta's optimization engine.


